scholarly journals Person-centred care in psychiatry: a clinical and philosophically informed approach

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Gerrit Glas

SUMMARY After many years of mental healthcare reform there is still a lot of unease among patients about healthcare workers’ lack of attention to their daily needs and to the tensions and ambiguities that accompany their attempts to integrate their condition into their lives. Person-centred care is often presented as a solution, but the term refers to many differing approaches and needs further specification depending on the problem it aims to resolve. This article presents and discusses a clinical and philosophically informed approach that flexibly focuses on the person- and context-bound aspects of the patient's condition and on the co-regulatory role of the clinician in the patient's attempt to regulate their condition. This approach is a way of thinking, rather than yet another model. It will be shown how this approach can be integrated in the core curriculum of specialty (residency) training in psychiatry.

1984 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 111-113
Author(s):  
Richard M. Heller ◽  
C. Leon Partain ◽  
Sandra G. Kirchner ◽  
Alan C. Winfield ◽  
John E. Chapman ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klara Bolander ◽  
Anna Josephson ◽  
Sarah Mann ◽  
Kirsti Lonka

2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 124-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry R. Goldberg ◽  
Eileen Haase ◽  
Artin Shoukas ◽  
Lawrence Schramm

In this study, the role of the classroom instructor was redefined from a “lecturer” responsible for delivering the core curriculum to a “facilitator” at the center of an active learning environment. Web-based lectures were used to provide foundation content to students outside of the classroom, which made it possible to improve the quality of student-faculty contact time in the classroom. Students reported that this hybrid format of instruction afforded them a better understanding of the content, a higher probability of retaining the content, and the opportunity to spend more time thinking about the application of the content compared with more traditional lecture-based methods of instruction.


2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (140) ◽  
pp. 219-224
Author(s):  
M A Nagarani ◽  
S Bhattacharya ◽  
B P Das ◽  
S Koirala

Curricular innovations such as multiprofessional education (MPE) sensitise healthprofessionals towards the role of other health professionals and inculcate team spirit.This is a preliminary report on MPE in practice in the preclinical phase of dental andmedical undergraduate courses at B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Nepal.The preclinical curriculum of the undergraduate courseis integrated, organ systembased and partially problem based. There is an emphasis on early exposure of studentsto patients and to community. The undergraduate course in medicine started in 1994and in dental surgery in 1999 based on the core curriculum developed at variousworkshops. The course duration and structure is similar in bot


2019 ◽  
pp. 287-300
Author(s):  
Joanna Kubaszczyk

The paper reflects on the specificity of the translation of texts belonging to the religious and theolog- ical literature. Religious and theological texts have been translated for millennia, many of them — originating in the sphere of Judeo-Christianity — lie at the core of Western culture. Their trans- lation, especially the translation of the Bible, was accompanied by theoretical reflection (see, for example, Jerome of Stridonium, Martin Luther or Eugene Nida), which permanently influenced the way of thinking about translation in general. The present study answers the question of how the translation of religious and theological texts differs from the translation of other texts and what the translator must or should take into account, translating religious and theological texts. The paper discusses, among others, the role of the word in Christianity, spiritual preparation, openness to the Holy Spirit, tradition and inculturation.


Prospects ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liisa Hakala ◽  
Tiina Kujala

AbstractPandemics, like other global challenges, are unquestionably curricular issues. They are curriculum issues not only because of the disrupting consequences of Covid-19 and the economic and social crisis alike but also because people have, through their own activities, contributed to global catastrophes and perpetuated injustices. This article attempts to answer the question: How does Finnish curricular thought, including the role of the teacher and the core curriculum for basic education, respond to the various global crises? While reviewing the current situation, the article also imagines a post–Covid-19 curriculum. Reactivating what is still powerful in Bildung/Didaktik and emphasizing the importance of education’s ethical dimension and the teacher’s role as a curriculum theorist offer the means for dealing with the theme. In addition, understanding the structure of the National Core Curriculum document, the political dimension of the Finnish curriculum’s design process, and the educative possibilities in subjects and multidisciplinary modules, the teacher is capable of creating opportunities for educational experiences that are (ethically) significant for students, proactively and in terms of crises.


2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 171-173
Author(s):  
Joyce VanTassel-Baska

This article describes how the arts may be used as interdisciplinary tools to enhance and deepen the learning experience for students. They may be (a) direct adaptations of the core curriculum, (b) added emphases in instructional approaches, and/or (c) an integration of artistic media into interdisciplinary concept learning. An organizer provides teachers with a way to integrate arts into an existing lesson, higher order questions to guide learners in understanding the artifact selected for consideration, and a reproducible rubric to assess a student’s developing sensitivity to the role of aesthetic experience in learning at a deeper and broader level.


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